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Lanthanum-mediated Biomimetic Aminoacylation

Methods are being developed to produce “designer proteins” from unnatural amino acids that are added into specific locations by the ribosome using an altered mRNA. To date, over seventy unnatural amino acids have been incorporated at specific sites in proteins by in vitro biosynthetic methods using chemically acylated-tRNAs and in vivo protein mutagenesis based on orthogonal tRNA/aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase pairs.
Lanthanum-mediated aminoacylation of cis-diols provides a general and selective method for the one-step preparation of aminoacyl-tRNA. The nature of this biomimetic process was studied for the reaction of ribonucleosides and nucleotides with N-t-Boc-protected aminoacyl ethyl phosphates. Successful aminoacylation was also achieved with unprotected aminoacyl ethyl phosphates. This method was extended for the aminoacylation of tRNA and analyzed by reversed-phased HPLC and MALDI-MS. These results will provide an insight to the ultimate goal of lanthanum-mediated direct acylation of tRNA and its applications in in vitro site-specific incorporation of unnatural amino acids.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/42391
Date15 November 2013
CreatorsHer, Sohyoung
ContributorsKluger, Ronald
Source SetsUniversity of Toronto
Languageen_ca
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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